The second chapter of John begins at "a village wedding" celebrated in Cana attended by the mother of Jesus (she is not named in the gospel), Jesus himself and his
disciples, who are now "five or six in number,
Andrew, John,
Peter,
Philip,
Nathanael, and probably
James". The hosts run out of wine, and Jesus' mother asks him to help. Jesus replies "What [is that] to me and to you?" (). Some interpretations suggest that Jesus is annoyed that she would ask him for a
miracle, and he replies that it is not his "time" yet. The
Holman Christian Standard Bible presents two interpretations, either "What has this concern of yours to do with Me?" or "You and I see things differently" whereas in the
Weymouth New Testament, Jesus' words are "Leave the matter in my hands". The coming of Jesus' "hour" (verse 4) is also referred to in
John 7:6, 30 and
8:20, meaning the hour of his glorification and his return to his father. The
Jerusalem Bible notes that "this 'hour' is determined by the Father and can be anticipated". Bengel suggests that, even if Jesus' fundamental "hour" has not yet come, his "hour of assisting them" has certainly arrived. Nevertheless, Jesus' mother still tells the servants to do whatever he asks, so he tells them to fill up the empty water containers with water. Afterwards, the
head waiter of the wedding tastes it and remarks to the
groom that they have saved the best wine for last. John tells his audience that the water was there for the Jewish rite of purification. According to John, this was his first sign or miracle (in Cana). It occurs immediately after
Jesus has told
Nathanael in John 1:50 that "You shall see greater things than that." According to the
hypothesis of the
Signs Gospel, this miracle was originally in that document. John uses the
Greek word meaning sign, or meaning work, instead of the term the
synoptics use, or act of power, for miracle. This miracle only occurs in the Gospel of John, not in any of the
synoptics. The story can be understood as John's fulfillments of
prophecies in the
Old Testament, such as in
Amos 9:13–14 and
Genesis 49:10–11 about the abundance of wine that there will be in the time of the
messiah. Messianic wedding festivals are mentioned in
Isaiah 62:4–5. One can also perhaps see this in the synoptics in for instance
Mark 2:21–22, where Jesus speaks about "new wineskins". Jesus' mother, never named in the gospel, appears again in John 19:25–27 at Jesus'
crucifixion. This begins a series of stories about Jesus' role as the new way that last until his second miracle or sign, the
healing of the official's son in John 4. ==Interlude (verse 12)==